Illinois sports betting revenue dips for the first time in February
![Illinois April](https://igamingbusiness.com/img-srv/Uhx5PpKAWpapPXeBdHWokuP8uuUiCSsXOWMv_e92Rsw/resizing_type:auto/width:0/height:0/gravity:sm/enlarge:1/ext:webp/strip_metadata:1/quality:90/bG9jYWw6Ly8vaWdhbWluZ2J1c2luZXNzLmNvbS93cC1jb250ZW50L3VwbG9hZHMvMjAyMC8wOC9za3lsaW5lLWNoaWNhZ28tY2hpY2Fnby1za3lsaW5lLTg5MjUwNC5qcGc.webp)
Adjusted gross revenue for the month amounted to $35.4m (£25.8m/€29.8m), down 28.3% from the record $49.4m reported in January, and the first decline since the state’s licensees took their first bets in July 2020.
Online wagering accounted for $33.3m of total revenue for the month, some way ahead of land-based sportsbooks on $2.1m.
Par-A-Dice Gaming Corporation, which runs a FanDuel sportsbook, remained the market with $11.7m in revenue, despite posting a $24,123 loss from retail betting.
Casino Queen and DraftKings followed close behind in second with $10.9m in revenue, then Churchill Downs’ Midwest Gaming & Entertainment and Rush Street Interactive on $7.5m.
Operators paid some $5.8m in tax, with the majority of this – $5.3m – based on the state’s base 15% tax rate. The remaining $541,832 was generated via an additional 2% tax on bets placed in Cook County, which includes Chicago.
In term of handle, players wagered a total of $509.8m on sport during February, down 12.3% from a record $581.6m in January.